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Last updateSat, 21 Sep 2024 12pm

Hussar Stag Auction raises $30k

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The Hussar Ag Society improvised this year with its annual Stag Auction and was able to raise about $30,000.
The annual event was cancelled last year due to COVID-19. Despite this the community was supportive and they were able to garner donations to keep the arena operating. This year however they partnered with Premier Auctions for an online auction and had a successful event.
“We are just over $30,000,” said Ag Society president Kyle Gordon.
“We have a good amount of local support from the businesses and the farming community and people in town. We are pretty lucky.”
There were some great items with more than 100 donated including generators, a kerosine heater, a beer fridge, and even fishing trips. One featured item that goes back almost as far as the Stag Auction, which has been going since 1976, is Old Faithful, a shovel. It went to Roman’s Construction of Strathmore for $1,550.
Typically they would also auction off centre ice advertising, however this year, they declined to sell it.
“We didn’t think it would be fair the people didn’t get their advertising for a whole year due to COVID, so we pushed that one-off,” said Gordon.
The funds raised at this year’s event were dedicated to the new ice plant at the Hussar Arena.
“We had a new ice plant put in last year, so we are just working on paying the rest of it off,” said Gordon.
He adds the utilities at the arena are increasing and this adds another challenge. They are grateful for the support. Gordon says their programs at the arena are starting to return after COVID. He says the arena is booked solid through the season.


Three Hills RCMP focus on impaired driving

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Three Hills RCMP are prepared to do their part so roads are safe from impaired drivers during the holiday season.
The Mounties in Three Hills will be putting particular focus on impaired driving during December.
According to a press release, the detachment is well equipped with officers trained in the Standardized Field Sobriety Tests, which provides enhanced skills in detecting alcohol and drug impairment. The detachment is also well equipped with roadside screening devices to detect a multitude of substances that may cause impairment.
The RCMP notes drivers should be aware of new legislation passed in the last few years, provincially and federally to make roads safer.
As of December 2018 and the passing of Bill C-46, mandatory alcohol screening in Canada became law. This means police officers can demand any lawfully stopped driver provide a preliminary breath sample to test for alcohol without reasonable suspicion the driver has alcohol in their body. This means if you are pulled over or at a check stop, you can expect to provide a breath sample.
“In December 2020, a total of 560 impaired drivers were removed from the roads,” says Supt. Gary Graham, Alberta RCMP Traffic Services.
In December 2020, Bill 21 became law in Alberta and it includes changes to the Immediate Roadside Sanction (IRS) program. This provides immediate and escalating consequences for impaired drivers
Increased impaired driving consequences under the new IRS Program include driver’s licence suspensions of 15 months for the first offence, longer for repeat offenders; first offence fines of $1,000, with increasing fines for repeat offenders, vehicle seizure of 30 days, mandatory education programs for offenders, drivers can pay for the Ignition Interlock Program (IIP) after 90 days of suspension with extended periods of IIP for repeat offenders, and depending on the circumstances, criminal code charges can still be laid by the police officer.

Don Cuncannon compiles Morrin hockey memories

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For many young men and women growing up on the prairie, lifelong memories are made on the ice with a stick and a puck.
For Don Cuncannon, hockey was part of his life growing up in Morrin, and while his playing days have long since passed, he collected his memories in a book to be shared with the community.
“I enjoyed doing it, and that was the good part. I was happy to have so many things I kept over 70 years,” he tells the Mail. “I had put them away in an old chocolate box.”
He explains his wife passed away in 2017, and the next year he and his son moved into a condo. During the move, he came across the box. When the pandemic hit, he was looking for projects and dug out the chocolate box. Along with his box of memories, his uncle Ossie Parry had a collection of 3,500 slides he had taken over the years. Parry was a very successful businessman in Morrin, who at one time was one of the only farm machinery dealers in Canada that had Minneapolis and Oliver and Massey Harris. His son Alan still had the photos and allowed Cuncannon to go through the slides, and he saved more than 1,000 on memory sticks.
“That’s how I started to make that book. I started to make one for myself, and I thought, ‘I know all the players that are still with us would like to have one,’ so it just kept going,” he said. “It grew up to 65 pages, and I had no idea it would do that when I started.”
“I made it because my daughter said, ‘Dad, when we go to the homecoming, you need to have it there.’”
The book features a collection of rare photographs, as well as clippings from game programs and extensive coverage in The Drumheller Mail.

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He was just a youngster when World War II hit, but he played on school teams. He said there was nothing really organized.
Following the War, the Morrin Legionnaires Club was formed in 1946.
It was a men’s team after they came back from the War. “I was just a kid, well there were three of us who were just kids, and we got a place on that team,” said Cuncannon.
Orkney and Michichi had a team. They continued through to the 1948-1949 season. It was competitive hockey, with Michichi winning the Starland Hockey League in 1947, Orkney in
1948, and finally Morrin in 1949. All the games were on outdoor rinks when the weather allowed.
When he went to SAIT, he had a tryout with Calgary Buffaloes and made it. He was married and returned to Morrin, where he worked in the county office for nine years before he struck out in business, with insurance and accounting.
Back in Morrin, he kept involved, not as a player but more as a manager for the Morrin Flyers, with coach Tiny Taylor.
“We weren’t a tough hockey team, but we were a good hockey team. Beiseker was rough and tough, but we had better skaters,” he said.
The Morrin Flyers played in the Drumheller District Hockey League, which also included McLean’s Monarchs, the Rosedale Broncs, East Coulee, Hand Hills, Rockyford, Beiseker, and Michichi.
The Flyers were a competitive team, and in the 1954-55 season, they were finalists, but in the 1955-56 campaign, they topped the McLean Monarchs. In the 1956-57 season, the Flyers came second to the Rosedale Broncs, who were coached by RCMP officer Bill Cutts. The next year the Flyers topped the Broncs for the trophy.
In 1959, the Flyers were beaten by the Monarchs, who were led by Ronnie Loughlin and Jack Samuel.
That was the last season Cuncannon had much involvement with the Flyers. He was grateful to the City of Drumheller for allowing them to play, and also approached the coverage from John Anderson who would write the game updates for The Drumheller Mail.
“A lot of the guys were moving away, so that was our last year. They did return a decade later; they played a reunion game in 1968.
The memories linger. He recalled a couple of years ago, he was at the casino at Cross Iron Mills. He ended up sitting next to a player from Beiseker, and they reminisced about their playing days. He sent one of the books to him.
He sold his business in Morrin and moved to Calgary in 1971. This was so his children could go to University. He still has deep roots in Morrin, and is working with the community as they work on opening a new museum in the Former United Church, making shadow boxes.
“I would go back two or three times a year, but with COVID we don’t go out as much. A big part of my life is Morrin,” he said.


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